Portal da Supercincronicidade

Supersynchronicity:
The Invisible Mirror

Unexpected connections between cultures and history, by Aldo Bizzocchi, PhD in Linguistics from the University of São Paulo (USP) and post-doctoral fellow in Comparative Linguistics (State University of Rio de Janeiro) and Etymology (USP).

Supersynchronicity: the hidden mirror between Latins and Saxons

What would you say if you were told that the two families of peoples that constitute the Western Civilisation, in Europe and Americas, that is, the Latin and the Germanic, are the mirror of each other? In other words, each country or people of one of these families has its exact counterpart in the other family, as if it were its mirror image?

What would you say if you were told that a kind of invisible law has been governing the destiny of these peoples for millennia?

The fact that historical, geographical, linguistic, social and cultural parallels do exist (many of them since the beginning of these families) without there being so far any logical explanation for it is what we will try to prove from now on this web portal.

If meaningful coincidences without an apparent cause are called synchronicities, so what we are going to show you here can be considered a supersynchronicity. This portal aims to demonstrate, in a scientific way and without appeal to any kind of mysticism, but in a language accessible to the average reader, that the Western world is constituted as a large mirror — an invisible mirror!

Get ready: you will be surprised, ecstatic and perhaps even bewildered by what you are going to read. Welcome

Essential reading for those who want to go further

Explore the concepts and discoveries about supersynchronicity. Understand connections beyond chance and delve into articles that broaden your perspective.

AS LEIS DA SUPERSINCRONICIDADE
AS LEIS DA SUPERSINCRONICIDADE

Recent Discoveries

AS LEIS DA SUPERSINCRONICIDADE

Receive the evidence of supersynchronicity

Who is Aldo Bizzocchi?

Aldo Bizzocchi holds a PhD in Linguistics from USP (University of São Paulo) and postdoctoral degrees in Comparative Linguistics and Etymology. He is a professor, researcher and author dedicated to the study of the origins of languages ​​and the invisible connections between the peoples of the West. With a solid academic background and numerous published books, he shares his passion for language, history and geography to reveal surprising patterns that span centuries — patterns that now have a name: supersynchronicity.